It's not that easy to listen anymore to the whining of an entrepreneur who can't seem to find any capital here.
Getting capital is never easy, but for technology start-ups it's no longer all but impossible. There are several Chicago venture capital firms now regularly nosing around for good early stage investments. So are Arthur Ventures of Fargo and Foundry Group from Colorado.
And local entrepreneurs ought to be able to bump into the most prominent investor now providing that capital in the Twin Cities. He's Ryan Broshar of Matchstick Ventures. He's easy to find because he makes a point of being easy to find.
Broshar is not necessarily the next J.P. Morgan. Broshar just turned 31 this week, and he's been at the venture investing business only a year and a half. He doesn't even have an office.
He declined to say how much money he's raised so far for his new venture fund, his second, but the guess is it may not be even $5 million.
But that's enough to be a major player. That's because Broshar is one of those rare investors eager to put the first investor money into a young company.
This could mean leading a "seed round" as small as a couple of hundred thousand dollars. That amount of money won't buy an entrepreneur much new office furniture or fund a year of salaries for a dozen new software engineers, but it could be enough to really get a company launched.
That's what he's hoping to do. In business school it would be called "filling the start-up funding gap."